BTW, if there are only a couple of unknowns about the original message
(like, say, the order of the numbers 1, 2, 3 and 4), it's pretty
straightforward to recover it from just a cryptographic signature.

Yep. Brute force is quite effective when n is low. Suffice it to
say, aj knows your votes now and will use it --- somehow[0] ---
in his nefarious schemes to get Woody out the door before pigs
can read mail[1][2].

There are ways to avoid this problem, of course, but Debian
doesn't use them. Applied Crypto devotes far too many pages too
the subject of secure elections.

[0] He hasn't been to clear on how, offering merely a 'mwahahaha'
as explanation.
[1] it is said that all programs will continue to bloat until
they can read email. Or www, if you're one of those new-
fangled type. I believe we can consider a pig a program
for the purpose of this discussion.
[2] Some might argue that this has already happened. See
<http://packages.debian.org/unstable/editors/emacs21.html>
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